On the other hand, investors who hedged oil exposure were capitalizing on the carnage. For instance, the simple inverse United States Short Oil (NYSEArca: DNO) was 6.3% higher Wednesday while the DB Crude Oil Short ETN (NYSEArca: SZO) was up 3.3%.

For the more aggressive trader, there are number of leveraged options, including the ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil (NYSEArca: SCO), which tries to reflect the two times inverse or -200% daily performance of WTI crude oil, and DB Crude Oil Double Short ETN (NYSEArca: DTO), which also follows a -200% performance of oil, jumped 17.4%. Lastly, the VelocityShares 3x Inverse Crude (NYSEArca: DWTI) takes the three times inverse or -300% performance of crude oil. On Wednesday, SCO advanced 11.6%, DTO jumped 5.9% and DWTI surged 16.3%.

Oil prices were at their intra-day lowest since 2003 on Wednesday as the ongoing global supply glut kept the market depressed. John Kilduff, founding partner at Again Capital, argued that the catalyst for the latest selling was due to the expiration of the February contract at the end of Wednesday’s session, CNBC reports.

The ongoing supply glut has filled energy storage space, including those at the Cushing, Oklahoma delivery point for WTI. Consequently, futures bidders are unlikely to take February contracts for physical delivery without a substantial discount.

“This condition at the hub could wreak havoc until the close of trading of this contract,” Kilduff told CNBC.